A major and quite apparent difference is the scanty amount of resources, such as paper, pencils, chalk, markers, crayons, scissors, technology, teachers' manuals, current textbooks, workbooks, library books, leveled readers, teaching specialists. I could go on and on. I could mention lights - my particular classroom has no power, ever, and most of the others use solar powered electrical lights - but it's not considered appropriate to turn them on during the day. Oh, and I could mention window panes.
Yet teachers and children here are beautifully resourceful - and that's definitely not detrimental to teaching and learning. One of the many wonderful things about teaching here is working with children who are bright and creative and eager to learn and who are learning to think critically and solve problems just as we hope all children will.
To be completely honest, some moments are fine and some aren't. What gets tiring is needing to be on top of every behavior at all times especially since there are so many needy children - essentially every single one. Every child here has had a more difficult upbringing than any of the other children I've taught through the years. Some will be as good as gold at most moments and others will try to get by with everything at all moments and others will only try occasionally. Just like a classroom full of kids anywhere.